Entertainment
Myshkin’s Ruby Warblers’ Newest Album, ‘That Diamond Lust’ Shows Sure Signs Of Spring
Electrocoustic chanteuse Myshkin puts spring in the area with ‘That Diamond Lust.’
Myshkin’s newest collaborative release, That Diamond Lust, sets her rich and dexterous alto voice against a backdrop of tracks collected from exceptional talents like Sailor Banks, Helen Gillet, Jesse Brooke, Paul Evans, and Heather Perkins, collectively dubbed, “Myshkin’s Ruby Warblers.” The Indiana-born, New Orleans-trained, Oregon-based singer-songwriter’s clever compositions blend meticulously crafted lyrics into points of sharp light with unexpected melodies dreamy enough to linger on your senses like a long-awaited summer breeze.
In a beautifully written bio, we get a glimpse into the singer’s life:
Myshkin is the child of Dutch immigrants, born and raised in the Indiana flatlands in a household of strict religion, liberal politics, musical passion and facility, and war stories just under the surface. She sang always, and began playing guitar and composing as a teenager. After 3 years of university theater studies, she took the other road: made homes of tipis, trucks and buses, drove cab, baked cakes, painted houses, roamed through New Mexico, New York, Texas and Tennessee. She landed in New Orleans in ’93, with a new name—found in a Russian novel and intended to keep her honest—and a solo record in hand, ready to start a band.
Myshkin’s timeline had allowed negativity to dissipate until the music came into its own. “It’s a record about transforming it into some peace, some kind of wisdom… making it light. I really wanted it to have this kind of lightness that comes from layering and then only keeping little slices of sound… I would only keep a little of each recording… so I ended up with this super-layered texture… like the title track, with eight separate vocal tracks,” says the traveled gypsy turned teaching troubadour.
This interview by Sunny Clark originally appeared on Oregon Music News.